He didn't make the call to storm the building, just to peacefully march towards it. The problem is, we all feared a false flag event. He must have been aware that even if people marched peacefully towards the Capitol, something could go wrong. Did he really expect people to just sit around the Capitol for 12 hours while the debates were taking place inside without any incidents occurring? People getting drunk, tired, fed up, desperate, etc? Maybe he should have thought about installing a giant screen somewhere for them to watch it together or something like that, with bands performing in between? I would like to hear what was his strategy for that day, what did he want people to actually do? Did he address that? He also should have warned people about instigators. Did he do that?
I think it is very important to find out, because this very moment when the Capitol was invaded, stopped the debates, which were the only chance for "the other half" to see and understand the evidence. It also actually changed their course: gave Dems the moral high ground of "preventing an insurgency" and GOP an excuse to argue less vigorously or not all. If you're in doubt - watch how they argued before the invasion, and afterward. How the whole dynamic has shifted. Not to mention - it now serves as an excuse for an on-going commie purge.
He didn't make the call to storm the building, just to peacefully march towards it. The problem is, we all feared a false flag event. He must have been aware that even if people marched peacefully towards the Capitol, something could go wrong. Did he really expect people to just sit around the Capitol for 12 hours while the debates were taking place inside without any incidents occurring? People getting drunk, tired, fed up, desperate, etc? Maybe he should have thought about installing a giant screen somewhere for them to watch it together or something like that, with bands performing in between? I would like to hear what was his strategy for that day, what did he want people to actually do? Did he address that? He also should have warned people about instigators. Did he do that?
I think it is very important to find out, because this very moment when the Capitol was invaded, stopped the debates, which were the only chance for "the other half" to see and understand the evidence. It also actually changed their course: gave Dems the moral high ground of "preventing an insurgency" and GOP an excuse to argue less vigorously or not all. If you're in doubt - watch how they argued before the invasion, and afterward. How the whole dynamic has shifted. Not to mention - it now serves as an excuse for an on-going commie purge.